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Health behind bars: can exploring the history of prison health systems impact future policy?

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posted on 2024-11-14, 22:31 authored by Kathryn WestonKathryn Weston, Louella McCarthy, Isobelle Barrett Meyering, Stephen Hampton, Tobias Mackinnon
The value of history is, indeed, not scientific but moral … it prepares us to live more humanely in the present, and to meet rather than to foretell, the future - Carl Becker. Becker's quote reminds us of the importance of revealing and understanding historical practices in order to influence actions in the future. There are compelling reasons for uncovering this history, in particular to better inform government policy makers and health advocates, and to address the impacts of growing community expectations to 'make the punishment fit the crime'.

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Citation

Weston, K. M., McCarthy, L. R., Meyering, I. Barrett., Hampton, S. & Mackinnon, T. (2018). Health behind bars: can exploring the history of prison health systems impact future policy?. Journal of Clinical Forensic and Legal Medicine: an international journal of forensic and legal medicine, 54 50-52.

Journal title

Journal of Forensic and Legal Medicine

Volume

54

Pagination

50-52

Language

English

RIS ID

118587

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